Letters to David
Irving on this Website

I've got most of your books and have read
them over the years with interest. The outcome of the trial
hasn't changed my opinion about you. I will keep reading any
new book you publish. History (WW.II history) is a hobby for
me so I'm not a specialist at all.

My field is photography. The trial didn't give me any
answers about the "Holocaust" -- I'm still none the wiser.
The only thing that the trial taught me is to be very wary
of the media.

In my eyes that is your "Triumph in Adversity". You made
a young person like me see how unreliable the media are. How
things get distorted and twisted. It's all very subtle (and
sometimes not) but it's there.

I saw a program months ago on the BBC about Rudi
Kennedy, a Jewish ex-slave worker in Buna, Auschwitz. It
was all about his quest to get compensation for ex-slave
workers. At one point he visits Hans Deichmann, a
relative of one of the top people (according to the program)
at I.G. Farben, who worked for them from 1936 till 1948. He
says he went to Auschwitz ten times (from March 1942 till
December 1944) and has these little I.G. Farben
"Taschenkalender" in which he wrote down all the dates and
what he did, like a diary. He says he saw the chimneys of
the crematoria and the smoke coming
out of them. He claims everybody talked about it.
There was nothing to hide.

When asked, he claims he knew about the gas chambers from
the end of 1943. He says Zyklon B was provided by a firm
that was nearly fifty percent of I.G. Farben.

I keep hearing so many conflicting stories. I don't know
what to believe anymore because each side always has this
"evidence" of their views.